Legal Eye: Is it wise to hit ISPs over file-sharing?

The government risks opening a can of worms...

COMMENT

Politicians are threatening ISPs with penalties if illegal downloading doesn't stop. But legal liability cannot rest solely on ISPs' shoulders, argues lawyer Simon Levine. To do so would undermine a central tenet of ecommerce law.

The government today told ISPs to crack down on online piracy or face legal sanctions. But the proposals outlined in the creative industries green paper raise more questions than they answer.

ISPs and piracy: Key issues

1. Protecting privacy: can the internet be policed without impinging on the rights of legitimate users?

2. Mere conduits versus active arbitrators: what is the liability of ISPs in relation to illegal activity.

3. A catalyst for crime? A Draconian approach could increase the sophistication of illegal downloading.

Culture secretary Andy Burnham clearly thinks the spread of online piracy dangerously undermines the entertainment industries and dilutes the value of copyright law.

His thinking is ISPs ought not to escape some level of liability given they ultimately reap the financial benefits of such internet traffic.

But an attempt to turn ISPs into gamekeepers, whether via a three-strikes system or other block-and-stop methods, is not the full answer.

Quite apart from posing a potential contradiction to wider privacy and data protection law, these proposals will be very hard to implement and enforce.

Any legislation to enforce these proposals would require an inordinate level of potentially indiscriminate digital surveillance and policing from ISPs. Not all aspects of file-sharing are illegal and distinguishing the legitimate from the malicious will not be easy.

To avoid branding all file-sharers as criminals, blocking techniques will need to become more sophisticated and closely regulated.

In particular, if the government adopts a three-strikes system, where a warning is followed by temporary suspension and ultimately full termination of internet access, it would need to be very carefully targeted at each stage to avoid wrongful persecution.

Certainly, ISPs should discourage illegal activities - and indeed should face financial penalties or other sanctions for letting piracy occur. But the full weight of moral responsibility, technical investment and legal liability cannot lie solely on their shoulders.

To do so would undermine a central tenet of current ecommerce law and turn ISPs from conduits into active arbitrators, opening a can of worms that digital lawyers may never be able to close.

More Legal Eye:

Richard Taylor interprets the High Court's software patents ruling

Such negotiations have been underway between the music and film industries and individual ISPs for a few years now but the practicalities of the process are still far from formalised.

While data can be made available to prosecute transgressors in court, representatives have yet to determine just how - and how much - information would be shared among ISPs.

Perhaps most concerning is the potentially energising effect full-on coercion may have on the pirates themselves. Clamping down on accessibility may simply force illegal file-sharers to find subtler and more sophisticated ways to distribute and share copyrighted material.

It may lead, for example, to more unsuspecting surfers having their unsecured networks infiltrated by enterprising wi-fi piggy-backers.

French president Sarkozy's early moves to introduce a three-strikes system set a potentially interesting precedent but surely we should learn from the experiment rather than immediately follow suit. The dust needs to settle.

The prospect of monitoring and blocking internet usage that this consultation ushers in presents a significant shift in the very ethos of the web. As it stands, neither the rights' owners nor the ISPs are ready for this watershed - or are likely to be able to cope in its aftermath.

What is clear is that wholesale solutions are not the answer; a combination of stick and carrot is required. Only when the industry is acting unilaterally and accepts a shared responsibility for piracy will it have any hope of enduring against it.

Simon Levine is joint global head of the Technology, Media and Commercial Group at DLA Piper. DLA Piper is the world's largest global legal services organisation with more than 3,600 lawyers across 64 offices and 25 countries. Its award-winning technology, media and commercial practice employs 70 partners specialising in IT, telecomms, media, sport and IP law. Experts in convergence between the technology, communications and media sectors, it advises some of the world's leading multinational sport, media, technology and entertainment companies.

Comments

There are 5 comments. Join the discussion

  1. 1. Craig Reilly

    BT has never faced prosecution for fraudulent activities committed over the phone, even though it may make money from the call charges. Royal Mail has never faced prosecution over crimes organised and committed through the post - should it not be held responsible for delivering letter bombs or substances intended to do harm? So why should ISPs be held responsible for the criminal activities of their customers?

    • 23 February 2008 13:02
    • Add comment
  2. 2. anonymous

    Why should an ISP have to pay a fortune to monitor every user - and the cost of that will be passed to the end-users. This will greatly increase the cost of broadband, making a digital future less likely.

    Plus why is the government looking at legislation to protect an out-of-date business model? Using this logic, anyone who builds a wall can sue the manufacturer of a car that happened to hit it and knock it down, because the car maker failed to put safeguards in place to monitor what drivers were doing and prevent it from happening.

    Ludicrous idea.

    • 26 February 2008 11:12
    • Add comment
  3. 3. Simon

    Let it happen - and see what the backlash is when the first innocent person gets kicked off and sues the ISP for damages.

    Once one ISP has coughed up damages like this, then the whole idea will suddenly get dropped like the hot potato it is. Then when the next "great idea" comes along, there'll be a lot less enthusiasm to implement it.

    • 26 February 2008 12:50
    • Add comment
  4. 4. anonymous

    Why is the government - or rather a very small number of MPs - pandering to the record and film industry?

    I have my suspicions - work yours out for youselves...

    • 26 February 2008 13:30
    • Add comment
  5. 5. Karen Challinor

    Simon - "Let it happen - and see what the backlash is when the first innocent person gets kicked off and sues the ISP for damages"

    the reaction will be a few column inches in the paper, a few people spraying their tea over their cornflakes when they read the article followed by a shrug of the shoulders and maybe a tut or two and precisely nothing will happen to change the legislation

    no one will write to their MP for example, no one will attend a demonstration, no one will actually do anything because we have the attitude of "well it's not that big a deal is it" or "well it's not me thats being scr*wed over so why should I care" or "well mp's never listen so why should I try"

    well if no one writes to their MP nothing will happen, if we all sit back and "tut tut" nothing will happen, if we don't start telling our MP's exactly what we want and when we want it they will continue listening to those with the loudest voice - in this case the entertainment industry and nothing we want will happen

    they are our MP's, they work for us, remind them of this or they will forget

    • 27 February 2008 13:35
    • Add comment

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

You can also log in with Facebook. Log in or create your silicon.com account below

  • Login

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy.

Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Membership FAQ

Get silicon.com's daily newsletter

  • Register on silicon.com

    Enter your email to register

Keep in touch with silicon.com

silicon.com newsletters